Meditations in an Emergency

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Meditations in an Emergency
AuthorFrank O'Hara
LanguageEnglish
PublisherGrove Press
Publication date
1957 [1]
ISBN978-0-8021-3452-3

Meditations in an Emergency is a book of poetry by American poet Frank O'Hara first published by Grove Press in 1957. Its title poem was first printed in the November 1954 issue of Poetry: A Magazine of Verse.[2]

The name of the book is purported to derive from English poet John Donne's prose work Devotions upon Emergent Occasions, stemming from a joke between O'Hara and other members of the renowned New York School of poets.[3] Critics have noted the influence of impressionism and abstract expressionism in the collection, with most of the poems detailing the theme of identity and everyday life in New York City.

The book is dedicated to painter Jane Freilicher.[1]

Poems

  • To the Harbormaster
  • Poem: "The eager note on my door..."
  • To the Film industry in Crisis
  • Poem: "At night Chinamen jump"
  • Blocks
  • Les Etiquette juanes
  • Aus einem April
  • River
  • Poem: "There I could never be a boy"
  • On Rachmaninoff's Birthday
  • The Hunter
  • For Grace, After a Party
  • On Looking at "La Grande Jatte," the Czar Wept Anew
  • Romanze, or The Music Students
  • The Three-Penny Opera
  • A Terrestrial Cuckoo
  • Jane Awake
  • A Mexican Guitar
  • Chez Jane
  • Two Variations
  • Ode
  • Invincibility
  • Poem in January
  • Meditations in an Emergency
  • For James Dean
  • Sleeping on the Wing
  • Radio
  • On Seeing Larry Rivers' "Washington Crossing the Delaware" at the Museum of Modern Art
  • For Janice and Kenneth to Voyage
  • Mayakovsky

Mentions in popular culture

The book, and references to it, are seen on several occasions in Season 2 of the AMC television drama Mad Men.

  • In the season's first episode, "For Those Who Think Young," the book is read by an unknown character in a bar and later by the show's main character, Don Draper. At the conclusion of the episode, a passage from the fourth section of the poem "Mayakovsky" is read as Draper inscribes the book to a then-unknown recipient with the message "This made me think of you -D" and subsequently places the book in an envelope and drops it in the mailbox.[4]
  • In the season's 12th episode, "The Mountain King", Draper, visiting California on business, visits Anna Draper, and finds the book he sent on her bookshelf—revealing that she was the previously unknown recipient.
  • Episode 13, "Meditations in an Emergency", is set at the time of the Cuban Missile Crisis and takes its title directly from O'Hara's book.

References

  1. ^ a b O'Hara, Frank (1967). Meditations in an Emergency. Grove Press. ISBN 978-0-8021-3452-3. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ Poetry Foundation. Frank O'Hara: "Meditations in an Emergency" on the website of Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, originally printed November 1954. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
  3. ^ http://blog.bestamericanpoetry.com/the_best_american_poetry/2008/07/frank-oharas-me.html
  4. ^ AMC Television. Episode Guide: Mad Men - Season 2, Episode 1: "For Those Who Think Young". Retrieved 6 June 2013.